…as in to check it out, verify, investigate, confirm authenticity, etc. Where did this word come from?I only started hearing it a few years ago.
This will get you started.
I too thought this to be a fairly recent term.
Thank you. I particularly recommend footnote #4 there.
From the OED entry:
vet, v.
- To examine carefully and critically for deficiencies or errors; spec. to investigate the suitability of (a person) for a post that requires loyalty and trustworthiness.
1904 R. Kipling Traffics & Discov. 270 These are our crowd… They’ve been vetted, an’ we’re putting 'em through their paces.
1924 H. A. Vachell Quinney’s Adventures 267 Shelagh ‘vetted’ Dolan’s brogue, and passed it as sound enough for an Irish-American.
1925 E. F. Norton Fight for Everest: 1924 iii. vi. 338 He should have all equipment…completely ready three or four months before shipment—only thus can everything be properly ‘vetted’ and criticized.
1938 G. Arthur Not Worth Reading viii. 110 The official in Pall Mall…who ‘vetted’ us…swallowed without a gulp some rather mendacious replies as to one’s technical knowledge of the various parts of a Canadian boat.
1947 E. Waugh Let. 29 May (1980) 251 The romantic castle was condemned by the architect I sent to vet it, as moribund.
1959 Duke of Bedford Silver-plated Spoon vi. 128 We went through an awful period while Brownie was ‘vetted’ at a series of interviews with relations, each more embarrassing than the last.
1978 G. Greene Human Factor ii. i. 63 HQ had her vetted.
Thanks for the triage on vet.
This is what I was wondering-- the origin. Thank you so much!
It sounded like it had to be a shortened form of another word and the only word I could think of was “veterinarian,” but I couldn’t make that fit with the current ubiquitous usage.
The term may have been around for a long time, but it’s only become *common *in referring to appointments to office and such in the last few (maybe 10-ish?) years.
My recollection is that it’s been used for at least a couple of decades commonly. I’m not sure if it’s the best of search terms, but on google ngram viewer I looked up “vetted” and got this result. Looks like it became popular around the mid-80s, and has increased in popularity since.
Now, I don’t know for certain that all those instances of “vetted” are being used as in the OP’s case, but I’m not really familiar with it being used much in any other manner as a verb.
ETA: Whoops, sorry. Didn’t realize the graph ended at 2000. Here’s a better one. It does seem that the word became much more popular in the last decade. Still, looking through Google news from 1985-1995 shows many examples of vetted being used in this manner.
I think 1992 is the magic year for the term’s breakthrough in US politics, in reference to Bill Clinton’s cabinet and other high post nominees.
Only uncommon in the US. Not uncommon in Britain for over 75 years.,
Also worth noting that in the UK, unlike the US, the term “vet” is** never **an abbreviation for “veteran”. If somebody is referred to as a “vet” it means he/she is a veterinary surgeon (and they aren’t called “veterinarians” either over here.)
You can also select just an American or British corpus to use as your base. When you do that, the trajectories are about the same since 1960. The over all usage is harder to judge without more information but it would appear just on what ngram presents that UK usage is about twice as frequent.
That is what always confused me about the A-Team; it was supposed to be about vets, but they were nothing like James Herriot…
There was that one episode where Siegfried and Tristan were trapped in a barn and made a rocket launcher out of an old milking machine and some sulphur powders.
Or am I thinking of Last Of The Summer Wine…